179 Ill. 71 | Ill. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court:
Christian Jevne brought this action of trespass quare clausumfregit in the superior court of Cook county, against the Western Book and Stationery Company, appellant, alleging a continuous committing of the, trespass and keeping him out of possession from July 1, 1893, until certain dates mentioned in the different counts of his declaration, during which time appellant took and received. to its own use all the issues and profits of said premises, whereby he lost the issues and profits and was deprived of the use of the premises. In other words, the action is trespass for mesne profits alleged to have been unlawfully received by appellant during its occupancy of said premises. Appellant pleaded not guilty, and the issue was submitted to the court without a jury. Appellant was found guilty and the damages were assessed at $675, and judgment was entered accordingly for that sum and costs. An appeal was taken to the Appellate Court for the First District, and while the cause was pending there Christian Jevne died, and the appellees, his executors, were substituted in his place. The judgment of the superior court was affirmed and a certificate of importance was granted, by means of which this further appeal was prosecuted.
At the trial it was proved that the premises were leased to the Belford-Clarke Company and sub-let to appellant; that a five days’ notice was served upon said parties to vacate the premises on July 18, 1893, for the non-payment of rent; that Jevne recovered a judgment in forcible detainer before a justice of the peace against saidBelford-Clarke Company, Morrill, Higgins & Co., and .appellant, July 19, 1893, for the recovery and restitution of the premises, and that appellant retained possession until October 4, 1893, when it turned over the keys and surrendered the premises. It was agreed by counsel that the fair rental value of the premises during the period in question was $250 a month, and counsel for appellant say they do not question the amount of the rent, but they objected at the trial to the introduction of the transcript of the judgment in forcible detainer, and to introduction of any evidence concerning rental value, unless it should first be shown that plaintiff had established his right to mesne profits by obtaining a judgment in ejectment. Their objection was overruled. They also submitted propositions of law to the effect that the action would not lie except after a recovery in ejectment, and these propositions were refused by the court.
It is argued on the part of appellant that this action of trespass for the rents and profits during the time which it held the premises is supplemental to an action of ejectment, and cannot be maintained until a judgment in ejectment has first been procured. There was formerly an action of this kind by which a plaintiff in ejectment was enabled to recover the rents and profits anterior to his judgment in ejectment. At common law, in order to complete the remedy in ejectment, where the damages allowed were nominal, an action of trespass was allowed to recover the mesne profits, and such an action, in which a recovery was sought by virtue of a right to possession on account of the legal title, could not be maintained until the right was established in the ejectment suit. The action of trespass for that purpose Jias been superseded in this State by the provision of section 43 of chapter 45 of the Revised Statutes, for making and filing a suggestion of the claim for mesne profits, and the action for that purpose has been abolished. (Harding v. Larkin, 41 Ill. 413.) But the right to recover rents and profits during an unlawful occupation was not limited to cases where there had been a recovery in ejectment, and it could be maintained where there 'had been a re-entry without such a judgment. If a trespass amounts to an ouster of the plaintiff, and he again gains possession by a re-entry, he may maintain the action, laying the trespass with a continuando and recover mesne profits as well as damages for the ouster, and, as a general rule, the rental value of the premises is the measure of the mesne profits. (Smith v. Wunderlich, 70 Ill. 426; 1 Chitty’s Pl. 177.) The worth of the use of the property while the trespass is continued is the proper measure of damages. (McWilliams v. Morgan, 75 Ill. 473.) “A disseizee, without re-entry, may have trespass for the disseizin itself, and, after reentry, he may have trespass for any intermediate injury to the freehold, because he is restored to his possession ab initio.” (4 Kent’s Com. 119.) “For after his re-entry the law, by a kind of jus post liminii, supposes the freehold to have all along continued in him.” (3 Blackstone’s Com. 210.) By the re-entry he is remitted to his first possession, and he may then have an action of trespass for mesne profits during the time of the tortious dispossession. He is then considered to have had a constructive possession during that time. (2 Waterman on Trespass, 373.) In this case there has been an abandonment by the appellant and a re-entry October 4, 1893, and it is no objection that there had been no judgment in ejectment.
The gist of the action of trespass is the injury to the possession, and the judgment in forcible detainer established the right to possession in Christian Jevne. After that judgment the possession of appellant ceased to be contractual and became tortious, and it remained in possession as a trespasser. The action of forcible entry and detainer was formerly criminal in its nature, but it has by statute become a civil action, designed for restoring the possession of real property. It is not an action to determine title, and a question of that kind cannot arise or be considered for any purpose. The rig’ht to immediate possession was, however, conclusively determined as between appellant and Christian Jevne. Appellant was estopped by the record from denying his rig’ht to such possession. Whether an owner of lands against whom a judgment in forcible entry and detainer has been rendered, on account of the forcible expulsion of a trespasser or tenant holding over without rig’ht, can make a defense or have relief against a suit for mesne profits is not involved in this case. This is the case of an owner who had demised the premises to a tenant whose possession had become wrongful. The judgment in forcible detainer was admissible in evidence to establish the right to possession in Christian Jevne and the character of the retention by appellant. Christian Jevne having’ established his right to possession, we see no reason why the rule stated should not apply upon his re-entry, and he be regarded as in constructive possession during the whole period. He proved his right to possession July 19, 1893, and the subsequent actual taking possession, and we think the law should assume that he had, during the time he was entitled, a constructive possession upon the same principle on which the law has indulged in a like presumption in other cases. The action is for an injury by an actual and continued trespass upon a possession which the law, for purposes of justice, will assume that Christian Jevne had. The rulings of the trial court were in accordance with our conclusions.
The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.